"The world is at a historic period of transformation in energy because of the rapid changes across the spectrum," Amos Hochstein, US Special Envoy for International Energy Affairs said in his address at the sixth annual India-US Energy Partnership Summit organised by TERI (The Energy and Resources Institute).
"I believe India is well-suited to lead this energy transformation and this process," Hochstein said, "has to be not just about lowering greenhouse gas emissions, but rather about access.
Therefore, he said that India can be a "laboratory for innovations" and more so because of the diversity of issues that it faces.
In its endeavour to attain a clean energy future, he said, the US is "the best partner" that India can have, given the shared experience of being federal democracies and innovations, especially in the financial sector that the US is leading in.
India may be the third largest emitter of greenhouse gases, behind the US and China, but its per capita output is only one-third of the world average, he said.
"While India has made advances in developing infrastructure and communications, it has to take huge strides in developing clean energy," Malhotra said.